Tuesday, May 31, 2011

May 31


Births
1935: Herb Alpert (Trumpet Player)
1938: Peter Yarrow (Guitar & Vocals for Peter, Paul and Mary)
1938: Johnny Paycheck (Country Singer & Guitarist)
1940: Augie Meyers (Keyboardist for Sir Douglas Quintet)
1944: Mick Ralphs (Guitarist for Mott The Hoople, Bad Company)
1948: John Bonham (Drummer for Led Zeppelin)
1952: Karl Bartos (Percussion & Keyboards for Kraftwerk)
1954: Vicki Sue Robinson (Disco Singer)
1962: Corey Hart (Singer)
1963: Wendy Smith (Guitar & Vocals for Prefab Sprout)
1964: MC Darryl 'D' McDaniels (Run-DMC)
1964: Scotti Hill (Guitarist for Skid Row)
1965: Steve White (Drums for The Style Council)
1980: Andrew John Hurley (Drummer for Fall Out Boy)

Events
1917: The first jazz record, "Dark Town Strutters' Ball," was released.

1956: Elvis Presley is the featured guest on Roy Orbison and the Teen Kings' weekly KOSA-TV show in Odessa, TX.

1956: A still-struggling Buddy Holly catches a showing of John Wayne's new movie, The Searchers, at the State Theatre in Lubbock, TX. At two points, the star sarcastically replies "that'll be the day" to another character, giving Buddy the impetus to write his first hit song.

1958: Guitarist Dick Dale performs his new song, "Let's Go Trippin'," at Balboa, California's Rendezvous Ballroom, a moment generally considered the birth of the surf music genre.

1961: Chuck Berry opens Berry Park in Wentzville, Missouri, with a public area featuring a petting zoo, picnic area, miniature golf, Ferris wheel, and swimming pool.

1964: The Dave Clark Five make their first appearance on CBS-TV's Ed Sullivan Show, performing "Glad All Over." Ed likes the clean-cut boys so much he has them on 18 more times over the course of the show's life, more than any other rock band.

1966: Lulu's first movie, To Sir With Love, begins filming in London.

1966: Filming begins on "The Monkees (Here Come The Monkees)," the first filmed episode of the television series The Monkees (though not the first shown).

1967: Big Brother and the Holding Company film a scene in the Richard Lester movie Petulia.

1968: During his vocal overdub on the Beatles song "Revolution 1," John Lennon begins to shout and scream "all right" and other wordless nonsense vocalizations over the long six-minute jam of the original recording, joined by Yoko Ono (attending her first Beatles session). The screaming and conversation between he and Yoko would become an integral part of the eventual track "Revolution 9."

1969: The Supremes host tonight's episode of ABC-TV's Hollywood Palace, also featuring The Jackson 5 and Sammy Davis Jr.

1969: The Rolling Stones recorded "Honky Tonk Women."

1969: John Lennon and Yoko Ono record "Give Peace a Chance".

1973: Led Zeppelin drummer John Bonham celebrates his 25th birthday with a Robert Plant-led audience singalong of "Happy Birthday" at the band's show in Los Angeles, then by carousing with friend George Harrison afterward. Harrison playfully throws the birthday cake at Bonham, who tosses George into the hotel pool.

1975: Freddy Fender went to No.1 on the US singles chart with 'Before The Next Teardrop Falls', his only US No.1.

1976: The Who secures its place as the World's Loudest Rock Band with a 120-decibel, 76,000-watt blast of a performance at Charlton Athletic Grounds in London. The record would stand for nearly a decade.

1977: The as-yet-unpublished tell-all book from Elvis Presley's bodyguards Sonny and Red West, entitled Elvis: What Happened? begins to leak out a chapter at a time to newspapers in England and Australia.

1982: R.E.M. signed a five-album deal with I.R.S. Records, an independent label based in California.

1998: Geri Halliwell (Ginger Spice) announced she had quit The Spice Girls saying "This is because of differences between us. I am sure the group will continue to be successful and I wish them all the best.

2000: After a heart attack following a show in Puerto Rico, Salsa artist Tito Puente had open heart surgery in New York City from which he never recovered.

2000: Janet Jackson announced that she was getting a divorce from dancer Rene Elizondo. The marriage had been kept secret for nine years.

2000: R&B Singer Johnnie Taylor died of a heart attack at Charlton Methodist Hospital in Dallas, Texas at the age of 66.

2004: Guitarist Robert Quine was found dead of a heroin overdose in his New York City home. He worked with Richard Hell And The Voidoids, Lou Reed, Brian Eno, Lloyd Cole, Marianne Faithfull, Tom Waits and They Might Be Giants.

2005: Strawberry Field (no s), the Liverpool orphanage which inspired the Beatles' famous song, is closed by the Salvation Army after almost seventy years.

2007: Rob Grill, lead singer of the Grass Roots, is arrested for illegal possession of prescription painkillers at his home in Mount Dora, FL.

Monday, May 30, 2011

May 30


Births
1909: Benny Goodman (Clarinetist & Bandleader)
1944: Lenny Davidson (Guitar for The Dave Clark Five)
1955: Nicky 'Topper' Headon (Drummer for The Clash)
1960: Stephen Duffy (Singer, songwriter, guitarist, founding member of Duran Duran)
1964: Tom Morello (Guitar for Rage Against The Machine)
1964: Wynonna Judd (Country Singer)
1967: Sven Pipien (Bass for The Black Crowes)
1968: Tim Burgess (Vocals for The Charlatans)
1971: Patrick Dalheimer (Bassist for Live)
1974: Cee-Lo Green (Thomas Callaway) (Singer, rapper, songwriter and record producer for Goodie Mob, Gnarls Barkley & Solo)
1974: Big L (Lamont Coleman) Rapper

Events
1966: University of New Brunswick student Anne Murray catches her first big break when the producers of the CBC-TV variety show Singalong Jubilee, for whom she'd auditioned two years earlier, offer her a weekly contract on the program.

1966: Dolly Parton marries her first and only husband, Carl Dean, in Ringgold, GA.

1968: The Beatles began recording what became known as the White Album. The double-LP whose official title was simply ‘The Beatles’ became the first Beatles album released with the Apple label. The first track they recorded was ‘Revolution’.

1969: The Beatles' latest single, John Lennon's autobiographical "The Ballad Of John And Yoko," is immediately banned at many radio stations in America due to its supposedly blasphemous lines "Christ, you know it ain't easy / You know how hard it can be / The way things are going / They're gonna crucify me." Some DJs create homemade versions of the song with the word "Christ" reversed, so as to defuse the controversy.

1972: Roxy Music make their stage debut at The Great Western Express Festival in Lincolnshire, England.

1974: Bernadette Whelan, a 14 year-old David Cassidy fan, died of heart failure four days after attending a concert of his. Over 1,000 other fans had to be given first aid during the White City Stadium show.

1978: Led Zeppelin begin recording what would be their final studio album, In Through The Out Door.

1980: Carl Radle (Bass for Derek and the Dominoes) died from a kidney infection, exacerbated by the effects of alcohol and narcotics at the age 0f 38.

1987: Adam Horovitz from The Beastie Boys was arrested while on tour after a beer can hit a fan during a disturbance in Liverpool, England.

1990: Midnight Oil closed down 6th Avenue in New York City as they played a protest concert in front of Exxon's offices. The protest was in reaction to the Exxon Valdez disaster.

1992: Paul Simon marries his third wife, singer-songwriter Edie Brickell, in New York, raising some eyebrows due to the couple's 25-year age difference.

1993: Jazz Bandleader & Composer Sun Ra died from pneumonia.

1997: Neil Young canceled his European tour because he had cut his finger while slicing a ham sandwich.

1999: In London, a bomb threat at a Kenny Rogers concert being held at Royal Albert Hall caused the evacuation of more than 3,000. No bomb was found and no injuries were reported.

1999: In New Jersey, Lenny Kravitz walked off stage after 40 minutes and collapsed from heat exhaustion. He had been performing in a fur coat.

2002: On the eve of her latest tour, Diana Ross voluntarily enters rehab in Malibu in order to "clear up some personal issues."

2003: Singer Finley Quaye was threatened with jail after his mobile phone rang when he was in the dock waiting to be sentenced on charges of assault. After being found guilty of assaulting his former girlfriend he was ordered to attend a six-month domestic violence program by a district Judge.

2004: Madonna was forced to pay out $400,000 in a lawsuit after copying ideas by the late French erotic photographer Guy Burton. Madonna had admitted that the video for her song ‘Hollywood’ was inspired by Burton.

2009: Six audience members are stabbed during gang violence at a War concert in Mountain View, CA.

2009: Little Richard, Chuck Berry, and B.B. King gather for a benefit concert to raise money for New Orleans public schools struggling to rebuild after Hurricane Katrina. Though too ill to perform, Katrina survivor Fats Domino attends as a special guest.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

May 29


Births
1903: Bob Hope
1936: Sylvia Vanderpool (Mickey and Sylvia)
1942: Sir Monti Rock III (Singer oin Disco Tex and his Sex-O-Lettes)
1945: Gary Brooker (Pianist for Procol Harum)
1953: Danny Elfman (Singer for Oingo Boingo & Composer)
1955: Mike Porcaro (Bass for Toto)
1956: Larry Blackmon (Cameo)
1956: La Toya Jackson (Singer)
1958: Marie Fredriksson (Roxette)
1959: Mel Gaynor (Drums for Simple Minds)
1961: David Palmer (Drummer for ABC)
1961: Melissa Etheridge (Singer)
1963: Blaze Bayley (Lead vocalist for Iron Maiden from 1994 to 1999)
1967: Noel Gallagher (Guitarist & singer for Oasis)
1975: Melanie Brown (Mel B) (Scary Spice for The Spice Girls)

Events
1942: Bing Crosby recorded the song "White Christmas".  It went on to become the biggest-selling single of all time with sales of over 30 million. (It was overtaken by the 1997 Elton John version of ‘Candle In The Wind’.)

1952: Hank Williams and his wife, Audrey, were divorced.

1958: Little Anthony and the Imperials recorded the single "Tears On My Pillow".

1959: Herndon Stadium in Atlanta holds one of the first outdoor rock concerts, featuring Ray Charles, Jimmy Reed, and B.B. King. Nine thousand people attend.

1969: The debut album "Crosby, Stills and Nash" was released.

1971: Three dozen audience members attending today's Grateful Dead show at San Francisco's Winterland Ballroom are treated for hallucinations after drinking apple juice purposefully spiked with LSD (some say by the band themselves).

1973: The Byrds officially disband for good (or so it seems) when founder and leader Roger McGuinn performs his first solo concert at New York's Academy of Music.

1973: Mike Oldfield released the Album ‘Tubular Bells’.

1977: Manchester band Warsaw, (later to become Joy Division) made their live debut supporting The Buzzcocks at The Electric Circus, Manchester, England.

1977: Elvis leaves his show in Baltimore, MD for a full half-hour, angering and bewildering fans.

1982: The Clash's "Combat Rock" LP was released.

1983: KISS play their last concert in their traditional makeup (although, reformed with all original members, they would return to the painted faces in 1996).

1989: Elvis Presley's first grandchild, Danielle Riley Keough, is born to Lisa Marie Presley.

1989: John Cipollina (Lead Guitar for Quicksilver Messenger Service) died from chronic emphysema at the age of 45.

1991: After just completing the recording of the 'Nevermind' album, Nirvana played a last-minute show at the Jabberjaw in Los Angeles. In the audience was Iggy Pop, Dave Grohl’s girlfriend and L7 bassist Jennifer Finch who brought along her best friend Courtney Love.

1992: After the recent AIDS-related death of lead singer Freddie Mercury, the Queen song "We Are The Champions" is banned from the graduation ceremony at Sacred Heart private school in Clifton, NJ.

1997: Singer songwriter Jeff Buckley disappeared after talking a swim in the Mississippi River, his body was found on 4th June 1997 after being spotted by a passenger on a tourist riverboat.

1999: Photographers taking shots of old cars wrecked at the bottom of Malibu's Decker Canyon discover the body of Iron Butterfly bassist Philip Kramer, who had gone missing on February 12, 1995. His death is ruled a suicide.

2007: A piano used by John Lennon on the night he died was put up for sale for $375,000 on The Moments in Time memorabilia website. The upright grand piano was part of the Record Plant Recording Studios in New York where the former Beatle recorded his 1971 Imagine album. Lennon was said to be so fond of the instrument that he had it moved to whichever studio he was working in and had used the piano hours before being shot on 8 December 1980.

2009: Phil Spector was jailed for at least 19 years for murdering an actress in 2003. The producer, 69, famed for his Wall of Sound recording technique, was last month found guilty of shooting Lana Clarkson at his California home. Spector had pleaded not guilty to the second-degree murder during the five-month retrial in Los Angeles. His lawyers said he would appeal. Spector was given a sentence of 15 years to life for second-degree murder and an additional four years for personal use of a gun.

Saturday, May 28, 2011

May 28


Births
1910: T-Bone Walker (Aaron Thibadeaux) (Blues Guitarist)
1917: Papa John Creach (Violin for Hot Tuna & Jefferson Starship)
1931: Sonny Burgess (Guitarist)
1944: Gladys Knight (R&B Singer)
1944: Gary Stewart (Country Singer)
1944: Billy Vera (Singer)
1945: John Fogerty (Vocals & Guitar for Creedence Clearwater Revival and Solo)
1948: Larry Gatlin (The Gatlin Brothers)
1949: Wendy O. Williams (Singer with The Plasmatics)
1955: John McGeoch (Guitar for Magazine)
1959: Steve Harrington (Singer for Visage)
1962: Roland Gift (Singer for Fine Young Cannibals)
1968: Kylie Minogue (Singer)
1985: Colbie Caillat (Singer)

Events
1955: According to Billboard, "The Ballad of Davy Crockett" is the nation's most popular tune, with four different versions on the charts at one time, equaling 18 million copies sold.

1955: Elvis Presley makes his first appearance on the Big D Jamboree radio program, broadcast from the Dallas Sportatorium by KRLD.

1957: The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS) is established, leading to the creation of the annual Grammy Awards.

1958: Buddy Holly receives his draft notice in Lubbock, TX, but is refused induction because of his notoriously poor eyesight and also a stomach ulcer.

1960: Elvis Presley visits Vegas, and his entourage is for the first time dubbed the "Memphis Mafia" in the local media, due to their penchant for wearing long coats and dark glasses.

1966: Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass' latest album, What Now My Love, enters the Billboard Top Ten, joining three other Alpert LPs there (Whipped Cream and Other Delights, South of the Border, and Going Places) and setting a record for most albums simultaneously in the top ten.

1966: Tina Turner released "River Deep, Mountain High".

1967: The Association make their television debut, performing "Along Comes Mary" on CBS-TV's Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour.

1969: Mick Jagger and girlfriend Marianne Faithfull are arrested in their London home on charges of marijuana possession, but released on $80 bail.

1973: Bassist Ronnie Lane leaves the Faces.

1976: After leader Gregg Allman testifies against the Allman Brothers' road manager, Scooter Herring in order to avoid prosecution in a drug trafficking sting, the band, considering Gregg's actions a betrayal against a member of the "family," breaks up. Herring is sentenced to 75 years in prison.

1977: Having finally settled his two-year-long legal battle with former manager Mike Appel, Bruce Springsteen is finally freed to record his follow-up to the 1975 smash Born To Run.

1977: Sting, Stewart Copeland and Andy Summers played together for the first time when they performed as part of Mike Howletts band, Strontium 90 in Paris France.  They went on to become The Police.

1978: David Cassidy is the guest star on tonight's "A Chance to Live" episode of NBC-TV's Police Story, a surprisingly effective dramatic turn that garnered such praise it led to his own show, the legendary flop David Cassidy: Man Undercover.

1983: Actress and singer Irene Cara started a six week run at No.1 on the US singles chart with 'Flashdance...What A Feeling'. Taken from the film 'Flashdance'.

1983: The four day US Festival '83' took place in California, featuring The Clash, U2, David Bowie, The Pretenders, Van Halen, Stray Cats, Men At Work, Judas Priest, Stevie Nicks, Willie Nelson. INXS, Joe Walsh, Motley Crue and Ozzy Osbourne. Over 750,000 fans attended the festival.

1988: Steven Tyler of Aerosmith marries his second wife, Teresa Barrick, in her hometown of Tulsa, OK.  The couple announced they were separating due to personal problems in February 2005.

1995: Hootie & the Blowfish started a four-week run at No.1 on the US album charts with 'Cracked Rear View'. The album went on to sell over 15m copies.

1996: Depeche Mode singer Dave Gahan was rushed to Cedars Sinai Hospital, Los Angeles after an apparent drug overdose. The singer was later arrested for possession of cocaine and heroin.

2001: Tony Ashton (Pianist & Keyboards for Deep Purple) died from cancer.

2003: Paul McCartney and his second wife, model/activist Heather Mills, announce the upcoming birth of their first child, to be named Beatrice Milly.

2004: Derek Frigo guitarist from 80’s glam band Enuff Z' Nuff died of a drug overdose aged 36. Two US hit singles ‘New Thing’ and ‘Fly High Michelle.’

2009: Depeche Mode singer Dave Gahan had surgery to remove a cancerous tumour in his bladder. The band who were currently on a world tour cancelled several shows because of the 47-year-old's ongoing health problems.